Title: Human Resource Management (HRM)
1Human Resource Management (HRM)
- What?
- the functional area of an organization that is
responsible for all aspects of hiring and
supporting employees (e.g., providing and
administering employee benefits). - all the activities related to the recruitment,
hiring, training, promotion, retention,
separation, and support of employees. - functions within a company that relate to people.
- Why?
- is the effective use of human resources in order
to enhance organisational performance. - the process of evaluating human resource needs,
finding people to fill those needs, and getting
the best work from each employee by providing the
right incentives and job environment, all with
the goal of meeting the needs of the firm. - applying human resources within complex systems
such that people succeed, performance improves,
and human error decreases.
(Source web definitions for HRM)
2Road map for HRM Leading teams (Spring Semester)
Task / Work process
3Topics HRM Leading teams
4Core functions of HRM
- Job analysis and design
- Recruitment and selection
- Training and development
- Performance management and compensation
- Labor and employee relations
5Examples in the news HR implications?
- Bonus payments in banks
- Swiss Re CEO Aigrain quits after major losses
- SR Technics closes Dublin plant with more than
1000 employees - Hitzfeld on managing a national football team as
a distributed team of club players - Increasing use of short time work
6Topics HRM Leading teams
7Strategic Human Resource Management
- "a pattern of planned human resource deployments
and activities intended to enable an organization
to achieve its goals" (Noe et al., 2005) - Derive human resource needs (skills, behaviors,
culture) from strategy formulation - Strategy implementation by means of HRM
practi-ces, which further individuals'
capabilities and motivation as well as actual
performance
8HRM practices Strategic choices
- Job analysis and design
- e.g. simple vs. complex tasks, specific vs.
generic job descriptions - Recruitment and selection
- e.g. external vs. internal recruitment, specific
vs. general skills - Training and development
- e.g. focus on current vs. future skills, train
few vs. all employees - Performance management and compensation
- e.g. behavioral vs. results criteria, internal
vs. external equity, input vs. behavior vs.
output control - Labor and employee relations
- e.g. GAV vs. individual contracts
9Examples of contingencies in strategic HRM (Snell
Youndt, 1995 Lepak Snell, 1999)
- Input vs. behavior vs. output control
- behavior control only works with low
uncertainties - input control most effective with high
uncertainties - output control has no effect on performance in
any condition - Uniqueness and value of human capital
- traditional, loyalty based employment
relationship when knowledge and skills are
firm-specific and of high competitive value - purely economic employment relationship when
knowledge and skills are neither firm-specific
nor of high competitive value
10HRM practices Operational decisions
- Job analysis and design
- e.g. adaptations in job assignments support for
job crafting - Recruitment and selection
- e.g. defining specific job requirements
composition of selection teams - Training and development
- e.g. individual career planning
internal/external course offers - Performance management and compensation
- e.g. defining pay scales specifying appraisal
"curve" - Labor and employee relations
- e.g. adjusting contributions/inducements in the
psychological contract
11HRM as operational leadership taskLinking
motivation, satisfaction and performance
12Topics HRM Leading teams
13Influence of normative assumptions on strategic
and operational HRM
- Example assumptions about human nature (Schein,
1988) - Economic man Employees will do whatever affords
them the greatest economic gain - Social man Social needs are the prime motivator
of human behavior, and interpersonal
relationships the prime shaper of a sense of
identity. - Self-actualizing man People seek a sense of
accomplishment in their work and are primarily
self-motivated and self-controlled - Complex man Human needs fall into many
categories and vary according to stage of
development and total life situation
14Leadership instruments based on the "complex man"
assumption
- Management by objectives based on goal-oriented
theories of leadership - Psychological contract based on social exchange
theory
15MbO How to make it work
- Coherent company strategy
- Increasing personal resources through job design
and personnel development for dealing with
complex goals and tasks - Sufficient control over the work situation
(transparency, predictability, means of
influence) - Leadership through coaching instead of
command-and-control - Systematic, transparent and participative goal
agreement and evaluation of goal attainment - Rules for handling conflicts
16Complementing MbO Designing psychological
contracts
- Psychological contracts ...
- complement and super-impose legal contracts.
- contain reciprocal, though not necessarily
correspon-ding expectations and offers between
employee and employer. - are derived from verbal agreements as well as
from behaviors of contract partners and other
members of the organization.
- The more corresponding
- and
- the more explicit the agreement
- the sounder the psychological contract.
17Using the psychological contract to handle
employment uncertainties
- Communicate and match reciprocal expectations and
offers - Early, comprehensive information also on
uncertain developments (individual and
organizational) - Support employability through training, job
design, and systematic career management - Distribute risks between organization and
employee according to individual coping
capabilities - Further organizational commitment which allows
for flexibility and "thinking in options"
18Topics HRM Leading teams
19Purposes of appraisal
- Improving performance
- Making reward decisions
- Motivating staff
- Developing subordinates
- Identifying potential
- Formal recording of unsatisfactory performance
- Note Conscious decision on which purpose(s) to
focus on is important
20Appraisal criteria
- Assessment of personal characteristics/
behaviors/outcomes - Recommendation Focus on assessing behaviors,
e.g. by means of behaviorally anchored rating
scales (BARS), and on assessing outcomes based on
achievement of objectives - Compare performance between individuals
- rank order
- grouping according to a predetermined percentage
per evaluation category
21Typical errors in appraising others
- Primacy/recency
- Halo
- Implicit theories
- Stereotypes
- Central tendency and positive skew
- Persistence of impression despite information to
the contrary - Attribution errors
22Attribution errors
- Attributionattributing causes to behaviors
- evaluating differences in behavior by comparing
people, tasks, and situations in terms of causes
for behavior (dimensions e.g. internal/external
causes stable/variable causes) - Examples of attribution errors
- Fundamental attribution error overemphasizing
the actor as a cause of events - Protecting self-esteem Underestimating
person-related causes for ourselves especially
for failure - Underusing consensus information little use of
information from comparisons with others
behavior - Confirming expectations e.g. assuming
person-related causes for behaviors that are
atypical for a particular situation assuming
situation-related causes in highly structured
situations
23Measures to avoid rating errors
- Systematic preparation of appraisal interview
- Conscious reflecting of potential errors and
their influence on the appraisal - Use of structured assessment scales (e.g. BARS)
- Open communication climate that also allows
critical feedback on the appraisal by the
appraised person
24Topics HRM Leading teams
25 Pay is ...
- money
- compensation
- reward
- incentive
- recognition
-
- Procedural and distributive justice at least as
important as absolute amount
26Basics for determining pay
- Decomposition of pay into
- base/fixed pay (task-related) and
- variable pay (person-related, e.g. performance,
experience, social situation) - Considering value of the work done for the
company, the market rate for the job, and
individual needs - Considering task requirements and qualification
requirements
27Problems of current job evaluation systems
- Overestimation of intellectual and leadership
requirements - Underestimation of physical, social and emotional
requirements - Consequence Low evaluation of many
female-dominated jobs and person-related
service jobs in general
28Personnel development
- Systematic furthering of personal aptitude in
relation to individual expectations and
organizational requirements by means of - - education/training
- - counselling/coaching
- - management by objectives
- - team development
- - job design
29"Fit human to task"Linking personnel
development to strategic HRM demands
- Analyze requirements
- define goals and target group(s) for personnel
development - define required qualification profiles
- identify indivdiual employees who need
development - Personnel development intervention
- Evaluation concerning learning, behavior, and
performance outcomes
30"Fit task to human"Tailoring personnel
development to individual career demands
- Define possible career paths
- e.g. management versus technical career
- Identify individual career needs
- e.g. locals versus cosmopolitans
- Continuous adaptation of career needs and career
paths
31Topics HRM Leading teams
32Leadership is
- the process of influencing the activities of an
organized group towards goal achievement. - the ability of an individual to motivate others
to forego self-interest in the interest of a
collective vision (House Shamir, 1993) - the influential increment over and above
mechanical compliance with the routine directives
of the organization (Katz Kahn, 1978)
33Basic leadership functions
- group internal functions
- Task orientation/initiating structure
- Set goals, distribute tasks, check work results
etc. - Employee orientation/consideration
- resolve conflicts, support/coach team members
etc. - group external functions
- Boundary regulation
- Adjusting external demands in terms of group
internal demands and possibilities
34Prerequisites of effective leadershipThe
"right" ...
- Person
- extravert, intelligent, emotionally stable,
conscientious, dominant, self-confident, socially
perceptive - However
- Differences on personality dimensions between
people with/without leadership positions are
often small (overlapping distributions). - Personality differences may be causes and/or
effects of being in leadership positions. - Different situations may demand different
personality profiles.
35Prerequisites of effective leadershipThe
"right" ...
- Behavioral style
- task-centred and employee-centred
- democratic rather than autocratic
- transformational rather than transactional
- However
- Individualized leader-member-exchange is also
crucial. - Different situations may demand different
behavioral styles.
36Prerequisites of effective leadershipThe
"right" ...
- Instruments
- Management by objectives
- Systematic performance management
- Standardized HRM processes for selecting,
appraising, compensating, developing people - However
- Instruments can support, but not replace personal
leadership. - Most instruments tend to work better in stable
situations.
37Topics HRM Leading teams
38Core concept of job designSelf-regulating teams
- Teams several people who work together over a
period of time to reach common goals and who
share a sense of belonging together - Self-regulation individual and collective
autonomy in order to coordinate work processes
and to cope with process variances and
uncertainties locally
39Prerequisites for good team work
- Adequate common task
- Complexity higher than individual competencies
- Clear performance criteria
- Collective decision competence
- Shared goal orientation
- Positive goal coupling
- Goal transparency and feedback
- Adequate group composition
- Different perspectives on the task
- Shared language
- Development of group rules
- Adequate group size
- Support for team development (form, storm, norm,
perform) - Explicit handling of conflicts between individual
and collective autonomy
40Team diagnosisCharacteristics of effective teams
- Goals are clear and accepted
- Individual and team goals melt together
- Responsibilities are clear and change depending
on situational demands - Leadership is seen as a shared responsibility
- Conflicts are dealt with
- Team learns and develops
- Contributions are recognized and valued
- Communication is open and engaged
- Group processes are reflected upon and discussed
41Changing leadership roles depending on stage in
work processes
- Providing structure at the start of a process
- Deciding in critical phases
- Coach/motivator in on-going work processes
- Team member ( no leadership) in routine
processes - Moderator in decision processes
- Evaluator at the end of a process
42New demands on leadership in distributed teams
Increasing complexity of situation also requires
increasingly complex leadership behaviors
situated and shared leadership
43Topics HRM Leading teams
44What is meant by team diversity?
- Demographic diversity differences in observable
attributes such as age, gender, ethnicity - Psychological diversity differences in
underlying attributes such as abilities,
personality, attitudes, values
45Why are organizations concerned with diversity
management?
- demographic change
- e.g. problems in recruiting personnel
- globalization of business
- e.g. international supply chain relationships and
mergers/acquisitions/international cooperations - increasing service orientation
- e.g. responding to special needs in regional
markets and of particular target groups - new concepts of organization
- e.g. increasing mix of functions/professions in
work teams
46Success of Diversity Management ?
- Studies on the relationship between team
diversity and performance - Negative effects through social categorization
- Positive effects through increased information
however sharing information is generally
difficult - With time negative effects of demographic
diversity (? social categorization) decrease and
positive effects of psychological diversity (?
information sharing) increase (Harrison et al.,
1998) - Cultural majorities profit from cultural
minorities more than vice versa in student groups
(Brodbeck, 2005)
47Success of Diversity Management ?
- Studies on the relationship between team
diversity and performance (contd.) - Positive attitude towards diversity is important
to achieve positive effects (Van Dick et al.,
2008). - More complex tasks are dealt with better by
heterogeneous groups (Bowers et al., 2000). - Group goals support performance in diverse
(individualists/collectivists) and non-diverse
teams (Crown, 2007) - No studies available on diversity and firm
performance
48Topics HRM Leading teams
49"Benchmarking" Characteristics of HRM in
successful companies (Pfeffer, 1998)
- Employment security
- Selective hiring
- Self-managed teams and decentralization
- High compensation contingent on organizational
performance - Extensive training
- Reduction of status differences
- Sharing information
50Topics HRM Leading teams
51Sample questions for exam preparation
- written, closed (!) book, 1.5 h
- Friday June 5, 815 - 945, HG G3
- five essay questions, four have to be answered
- sample questions
- (1) Coaches of successful football teams are
often taken as models for effective leadership in
companies. Based on the leadership concepts
dicussed in the lecture, is this justified? - (2) What would you do when conducting a
performance appraisal interview in order to avoid
attribution errors? - Exam counts for 50 and semester project for 50
of total course grade.
52Master thesis topics
- Currently offered thesis topics
- Analysis of organizational routines in high-risk
operations - Organizational dynamics of regulation in the
finance sector - Collaborative planning and the role of
information uncertainty in Air Traffic Management - Planning and coordination in health care
- It is always possible to directly contact any
member of the research group org.ar.t to discuss
possible topics, see also the description of
research on our webpage www.oat.ethz.ch